
Personal details
All About this Star
Biography:
Few actors get to enjoy the status of "overnight sensation". Next to none get to enjoy it twice. Yet this has happened to Clive Owen, the latest addition to the UK's canon of international superstars. Breaking through, back in 1990, as the wisecracking, sharp-suited wheeler-dealer Stephen Crane in the hit show Chancer, he was the hottest thing on TV. Then, after spending the best part of a decade seeking cinematic success, came the sleeper smash Croupier. Failing dismally in the UK, it looked at first to be a disaster. Yet the US critics loved it and, Stateside, it raked in millions, at the same time lifting Owen into the upper echelons. And, this time, he was ready.
Clive Owen was born on 3 October, 1964, in Coventry. His father, a Country and Western singer, walked out when he was three (he'd not meet him again for 16 years), and he was raised by his mother and stepfather, the latter working in the ticket office for British Rail. Clive was the fourth of five brothers. The eldest was Garry, now a salesman. Then came Alan and Lee, musicians (they'd release a single called Heartbeat), then Clive and Scott.
Attending Binley Park Comprehensive School, Clive was initially a good student, in the top stream. Then something thoroughly unexpected happened. Clive has often said that, for some unknown reason, he always wanted to act. But it was only after he played the Artful Dodger in a production of Oliver! that everyone else knew it too. Bitten badly by the bug, he couldn't concentrate on anything else, putting all his energy into the youth theatre he joined at 13. His schoolwork fell away dramatically. Sitting nine O-levels, he passed only one - English.
His persistence was amazing, really. When he first announced in class that he wanted to act, his teacher encouraged all the other kids to laugh at him. Thankfully the steely intensity he exudes onscreen is a real part of his character and he kept at it.
After his catastrophic exam results, Clive was all for jacking school in. But one teacher saw his potential and was keen for him to continue his studies at drama school. Being a prickly little sod, Clive was having none of it. No one can teach you how to act, he said, it's all inside you already. The teacher fought back, arranging an audition for him at Mountview college and even buying him a train ticket to London. Owen made the journey, and was accepted by Mountview. Yet even this didn't work. Absolutely convinced that drama school was useless, Clive turned Mountview down, deciding instead to keep working with his youth theatre group and seek work.
It would be a bad two years. Another alumnus of Binley Park had been John Bradbury, drummer of the band The Specials, and The Specials' Number One hit Ghost Town had pretty accurately described the state of Coventry at the time. Work was near impossible to find and, gradually losing contact with his theatre group, Clive began to waste away. "I was doing what half of Coventry was doing at the time," he said later, "playing pool and waiting for the next Giro".
Come 1984, his situation was desperate, so desperate that his altered his anti-education stance and, applying to RADA, was accepted. His fellow pupils including Ralph Fiennes and Jane Horrocks, he did well, graduating in 1987. He also had a stroke of luck, experience-wise. While at RADA, his class worked on a new Howard Barker play, then being performed at the Royal Court with Gary Oldman in the lead. When Oldman fell ill, Clive was asked to step in - being the only other actor in the world who knew the part.
After graduation, Owen went looking for stage work. He appeared in The Cat And The Canary at Watford, and Twelfth Night at the Crucible in Sheffield. Then he won a place at the Young Vic, playing in Romeo And Juliet and Measure For Measure and, in Manchester, The Doctor's Dilemma. He also met his wife. Onstage. In an incident so romantic it borders on clich', while playing Romeo he fell for his Juliet, Sarah Jane Fenton. Though their relationship would occasionally be turbulent, with the couple splitting up several times, it would last, the pair marrying in 1995 and eventually producing two daughters, Hannah and Eve.
It was all looking good. In 1988, Clive made his film debut, in Vroom. Here he and David Thewlis played two northern lads who restore a classic American car and take off on the road. Before they leave, though, Clive picks up sexy widow Diana Quick, who adds serious spice to the trip. Next he showed a very dark side with his portrayal of the psychotic Gideon Sarn, alongside Janet McTeer's Prue Sarn, in the historical costume drama Precious Bane. And then came a big TV hit when he played John Ridd, the man who takes Lorna Doone to the altar in RD Blackmore's classic. Polly Walker was his Lorna and Sean Bean, of course, was the brooding Carver Doone.
Then, suddenly and quite unexpectedly, he was a star. Chancer, where he played the natty, waggish Stephen Crane, pulling scams on a weekly basis, was immensely popular, throwing Clive's life into turmoil. The tabloid press were deeply interested in this good-looking newcomer and invaded his privacy wherever possible. He should have enjoyed it, but he didn't. Hating the constant attention of the tabloids, he refused to co-operate with them, gaining a reputation as a "difficult" actor. Also, as a serious thespian, he was aware of the danger he was in. The public might forever see him as Crane, or at least as a loveable rogue. Threatened with typecasting, he decided to bail out.
Onscreen, this meant controversy.





























